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Justinian commissioned the Corpus Juris Civilis (Body of Civil Law), which was also given the name Justinian Code in the Renaissance.

This work was not an adaptation of Roman civil law. It was a reorganisation and an updating of centuries of Roman juridical tradition and an aid for law students.

There were four parts of the Corpus Juris Civilis.

1) The Codex compiled a selection of imperial enactments going back to the days of Hadrian.

2) The Digesta was a anthology of 50 books of fragments and essays by the most prominent jurists in Roman history. These writings were private opinions.

3) The Institutiones comprised four student textbooks which introduced legal conceptual elements in a less developed manner compared with the other two parts.

4) The Novellae was a collection of laws promulgated by Justinian from after the publication of the Corpus until his death.

The aim of the work was to reorganise the judicial system of the empire which over time had became chaotic, to discard redundant enactments and the ones that had been repealed, and to amend obscure passages.

With regard to the codex part of this work, there were two editions. The first one was already redundant when it was published in 529 because it contained enactments that had already become redundant and it did not include enactments that had been issued in the meantime. This edition has been lost. As second edition was published in 534.

This codex was not the first one. there had been three earlier ones: the Codex Theodosianus, published in 429 which collected the enactments of the Christian emperos since 312; the Codex Gregorianus, published in the 380s which collected enactments from the 130s to the 290s, and the Codex Hermogeaunus, which collected the enactments of the emperors of the tetrarchy (Diocletian, Maximian, Constantius and Gelerius), mostly from 293-94. The latter provided a model for the stucture of the Corpus Juris Civilis.

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